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You don't draft a guard in the 1st ... or do you?


Thurman#1

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1 hour ago, Turbo44 said:

2 WRs may be excessive, but 2 CB's isn't.  we typically only play 2 LB's, so any that you draft is mostly for ST, We have two top safeties already, have 10 DT/DEs that we probably keep on the team, and a how's a RB getting any PT behind the 3 guys we have (unless it's a 1st round pick). 

Our two top safeties are both going to be 31 when the season starts there are only about 10 safeties in the league older than either of them, and only McCourty and Smith from the Vikings are playing near a similar level.  They will hit the wall, probably best to get someone in here to learn on a rookie deal.

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4 minutes ago, BearNorth said:

Our two top safeties are both going to be 31 when the season starts there are only about 10 safeties in the league older than either of them, and only McCourty and Smith from the Vikings are playing near a similar level.  They will hit the wall, probably best to get someone in here to learn on a rookie deal.

Fair enough

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I don't know the field, but you draft the best OL and if your 3rd best OT is still 1 of your top 5, slide him inside. If there is a G there whose talent is on par with other players at that spot, go ahead. I'm wondering if we wouldn't have been better off taking an OT in the 2nd round last year. I like Basham, but he isn't likely to help us any time soon. We say G's don't affect the game much even our weakness there hurt us considerably last year. We say we approach the draft with needs, but when you have to pay several huge salaries, you're going to have them. Right now CB and RG are huge holes and I would add that RT is also. I know Brown filled in admirably and I hope that some day he'll be a starting caliber RT, but he's clearly got a very long way to go to reach that level. We will pay a steep price if we don't address these needs in the top 2 rounds. I'd like to see us trade down and garner 2 top 40 picks to address both positions. This is a bigger than usual draft for Beane. He needs to nail it on days 1 and 2.

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Would you take Quenton Nelson and a Ryan Bates caliber WR/pass rusher/CB? Or Ryan Bates and a Quenton Nelson caliber WR/pass rusher/CB? The 2nd option is a no brainer for me.

 

Elite interior linemen don't change games, they just plug a single spot in a cohesive unit. 1st round picks are for game changing talents. I would take a RB or a safety before IOL in the 1st round. You can find solid IOL in free agency for reasonable deals, or mid-rounds of the draft. Game changing players you either have to draft early or give them record breaking contracts in free agency. I want game changing players on a cost controlled contract for 5 years. Zion Johnson is not and never will be a game changing player even if he's as good as his most optimistic projections.

 

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8 minutes ago, HappyDays said:

Would you take Quenton Nelson and a Ryan Bates caliber WR/pass rusher/CB? Or Ryan Bates and a Quentin Nelson caliber WR/pass rusher/CB? The 2nd option is a no brainer for me.

 

Elite interior linemen don't change games, they just plug a single spot in a cohesive unit. 1st round picks are for game changing talents. I would take a RB or a safety before IOL in the 1st round. You can find solid IOL in free agency for reasonable deals, or mid-rounds of the draft. Game changing players you either have to draft early or give them record breaking contracts in free agency. I want game changing players on a cost controlled contract for 5 years. Zion Johnson is not and never will be a game changing player even if he's as good as his most optimistic projections.

 

Agree except never RB in the first

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On 3/28/2022 at 7:36 PM, SoTier said:

The Indianapolis Colts drafted guard Quentin Nelson with the #6 overall pick a few drafts ago.

 

And now what do they do? Are they going to give a guard a $100 million contract? I think that's crazy. The Chiefs gave Joe Thuney an $80 million contract and everyone salivated over how unstoppable their offense would be. One year later they're saying goodbye to the 2nd most important player on their team because they can't meet his contract demands and suddenly their offense looks a lot less potent than it ever has in the Mahomes era. You think Thuney's $22 million cap hit in 2023 has something to do with that? You can find adequate starting guards for $4 to $5 million easily and use the saved cap space to pay actual game changers.

 

Edited by HappyDays
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If its the best available then I draft him....but I if we went that route I would like to draft a OT that can play OG.

 

I am watching these mock drafts and I see some where all the best WR AND CB's are gone.....what do you do then.....trade down?   Draft Breece Hall?

 

I think in that situation a OL should def be in play

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On 3/30/2022 at 1:29 PM, HappyDays said:

Would you take Quenton Nelson and a Ryan Bates caliber WR/pass rusher/CB? Or Ryan Bates and a Quenton Nelson caliber WR/pass rusher/CB? The 2nd option is a no brainer for me.

 

Elite interior linemen don't change games, they just plug a single spot in a cohesive unit. 1st round picks are for game changing talents. I would take a RB or a safety before IOL in the 1st round. You can find solid IOL in free agency for reasonable deals, or mid-rounds of the draft. Game changing players you either have to draft early or give them record breaking contracts in free agency. I want game changing players on a cost controlled contract for 5 years. Zion Johnson is not and never will be a game changing player even if he's as good as his most optimistic projections.

 

 

 

Great interior linemen absolutely change games. Not least by not allowing your QB to be injured or consistently rushed.

 

And plugging a single spot in a unit and moving it from below average to well above average ... that is game-changing.

 

When people say game-changing, they typically mean people who make the play at the ball. And that's the easy to observe guy, said to have "made the play," but that's nonsense. The play is made by eleven guys. It would not have been made if an OL had let a rusher past who put Allen in the hospital.

 

What people mean by game-changing plays is flashy plays, at the point of contact, generally on the ball. Those are cool plays. But anyone who thinks that one guy made any play whatsoever is missing the point. Those should be called something else, maybe splash plays or highlight reel plays.

 

Game-changing plays are by no means limited to splash or highlight reel plays.

 

The biggest game-changers for the Bills were probably Josh Allen, Ryan Bates (when he was plugged in, the increase in offensive efficiency was instantly noticeable, it was consistent and long-lasting. He was the biggest game-changer on the Bills last year, IMO), and whoever replaced him (guys like Dane Jackson did OK, but the defense simply wasn't the same. In a bad way, Jackson was a game-changer, particularly against teams with a number of quality receivers such as the Chiefs.)

 

If we'd had a better CB3, that guy would have been a major game changer even though nobody would really have noticed him.

 

A really good functional line has a massive impact on offensive function. And one guy can absolutely have an OL take a major leap, as we saw with Bates.

 

And when you draft you don't get to choose who's available to you. You don't get to say, "OK, I'll take the Quenton Nelson calibre wide receiver / pass rusher / CB." If you did say that at #25, the answer is likely to be, "He's on the roster of the team that drafted 8th."

 

You take the guy who's as close as you can find to Quenton Nelson calibre (BPA) at a position of need. And this year, IOL is absolutely a position of need.

 

 

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On 3/30/2022 at 2:04 PM, HappyDays said:

 

And now what do they do [after giving the big contract to Joe Thuney]? Are they going to give a guard a $100 million contract? I think that's crazy. The Chiefs gave Joe Thuney an $80 million contract and everyone salivated over how unstoppable their offense would be. One year later they're saying goodbye to the 2nd most important player on their team because they can't meet his contract demands and suddenly their offense looks a lot less potent than it ever has in the Mahomes era. You think Thuney's $22 million cap hit in 2023 has something to do with that? You can find adequate starting guards for $4 to $5 million easily and use the saved cap space to pay actual game changers.

 

 

 

I think Thuney's hit has a bit to do with their not having more under the cap next year. Not much, though. Next year he is going to be an $8.1M hit. There isn't the slightest doubt he's worth that.

 

I also think Thuney also has a lot to do with Mahomes' being healthy right now. Mahomes' $35M cap hit had an awful lot more to do with Tyreek Hill not being there than Thuney's $8.1M. It's worth it for Thuney.

 

And that the Chiefs probably just love Tyreek but had a max they wanted to give him, and Tyreek didn't want to give a discount for the hometown team. The reason they aren't bringing back their WR is likely that they didn't want to give him $120M over four years with $72.2M guaranteed. Think he'll have his usual massive impact in Miami with Tua throwing to him as he did last year with Mahomes? I don't. The Chiefs are playing moneyball. It's smart.

 

And so was paying to keep Mahomes healthy and unpestered.

 

And yes, you can find adequate guards for cheap. They won't play as well. You can find adequate guys for cheaper at every position. You will pay a price in efficiency.

 

That's why you take the BPA at a position of need. (IMO in no order: WR, CB, IOL, DLk

 

I'm NOT saying we should draft a guard. I absolutely AM saying that we should strongly consider doing so (and will strongly consider it) if he is the BPA on their board. Keeping Josh Allen unmolested is huge, as is helping keep a real run game going to take some of the pressure off Allen's shoulders.

 

 

Edited by Thurman#1
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On 3/29/2022 at 9:46 AM, Shaw66 said:

Yeah, I agree with that.  But at 25, or at any place Buffalo could reasonably trade up to, you're not finding a generational guard.    Beyond #5 or in a really good year, #10 or #12, you're just talking about good football players.   So if there's a general talent at guard this season, the Bills aren't getting him.   

 

And what I said still holds.  If you aren't taking a generational talent, taking a really good guard is like taking a really good long-snapper.   Guard just isn't a position that you look to fill with an All-Star.   Might you one day?  Yes, if the stars align.   But you're not looking for guards in the first round.   You just fill in your guard spots as you can.  

 

And, by the way, once in a while you get a guy in the second or third round who turns out to be a great talent and you have him for a long time.  

 

 

A long snapper? In no way. Nobody thinks that, nobody. You know that for an unquestioned fact by comparing salaries for long-snappers to guards and by comparing where long-snappers get picked in the draft and comparing that as well. There's no comparison.

 

A guard protects your QB on every single pass play and your RB on every single run play. It's a crucial piece (they all are) in making your offense work well.

 

At #25, you aren't likely to fill any position with an all-star. Top twelve or so, your odds might be pretty decent. Around #25 you're successful if you get a long-time starter who plays well above-average

 

These are the #25 picks back to 2000:  Travis Etienne, Brandon Aiyuk, Marquise Brown, Hayden Hurst, Jabrill Peppers, Artie Burns, Shaq Thompson, Jason Verrett, Xavier Rhodes, Dont'a Hightower, James Carpenter, Tim Tebow, Vontae Davis, Mike Jenkins, Jon Beason, Santonio Holmes, Jason Campbell, Ahmad Carroll, William Joseph, Charles Grant, Freddie Mitchell, and Chris Hovan.

 

That's the rough spectrum you're probably looking at. There are a few guys there who are/were really able to play. A bunch of good players, and some absolute dogs. If you compare your guard at #25 to an imaginary group of guys playing "like an All-Star," the guard looks terrible. But there aren't a whole lot of all-stars in that group up above. Comparing a guard playing very good ball and protecting Allen and allowing the run game to be better and to take pressure off Allen compared to those guys the comparison is actually pretty reasonable.

 

The value a guy brings is how much better he helps the whole team, the whole system, to play. Guards can help a lot.

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On 3/30/2022 at 12:29 AM, HappyDays said:

Would you take Quenton Nelson and a Ryan Bates caliber WR/pass rusher/CB? Or Ryan Bates and a Quenton Nelson caliber WR/pass rusher/CB? The 2nd option is a no brainer for me.

 

Elite interior linemen don't change games, they just plug a single spot in a cohesive unit. 1st round picks are for game changing talents. I would take a RB or a safety before IOL in the 1st round. You can find solid IOL in free agency for reasonable deals, or mid-rounds of the draft. Game changing players you either have to draft early or give them record breaking contracts in free agency. I want game changing players on a cost controlled contract for 5 years. Zion Johnson is not and never will be a game changing player even if he's as good as his most optimistic projections.

 

 

The only thing is - you have this as an either or.  As though at 25 there is a great guard, but also great WRs, PRs, and CBs.  

 

The way this draft is at 25 you might get a CB who's more likely a 2nd round talent than first.  And the talent at WR might not see the field more htan 30-40% of snaps this year.  I think the value at WR is great, but the impact in 2022 might be limited.  

 

The other thing to consider - people are penciling in the 4th year swing tackle/guard who had 294 snaps in 2021, 82 in 2020, 78 in 2019 - as our starting RG.  Despite him not... playing RG really at all during this time.  While also saying we need to replace dane jackson, who had 193 snaps in 2020, and 484 in 2021.  I agree we could use some speed or whatever and upgrades on the back end etc. but he has played perfectly fine when given snaps.  He's no more of a liability than wallace ever was, and seems to tackle better.  

 

If i had my choice in the first - gimme the top guy on the board.  I assume they'd stay away from pass rusher, but it its a tackle or something it wouldn't shock me at all.  Same with WR - we have good WRs but only 1 is on a rookie deal.  Edmunds is in a walk year - and very expensive.  Someone might want him in a trade.  I'm also content to move down - Try and ger 5 picks across rounds 2-4 - can get CB, RB, WR, IOL, LB in any order and get some people to compete at all of those positions.  

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49 minutes ago, Thurman#1 said:

 

 

A long snapper? In no way. Nobody thinks that, nobody. You know that for an unquestioned fact by comparing salaries for long-snappers to guards and by comparing where long-snappers get picked in the draft and comparing that as well. There's no comparison.

 

A guard protects your QB on every single pass play and your RB on every single run play. It's a crucial piece (they all are) in making your offense work well.

 

At #25, you aren't likely to fill any position with an all-star. Top twelve or so, your odds might be pretty decent. Around #25 you're successful if you get a long-time starter who plays well above-average

 

These are the #25 picks back to 2000:  Travis Etienne, Brandon Aiyuk, Marquise Brown, Hayden Hurst, Jabrill Peppers, Artie Burns, Shaq Thompson, Jason Verrett, Xavier Rhodes, Dont'a Hightower, James Carpenter, Tim Tebow, Vontae Davis, Mike Jenkins, Jon Beason, Santonio Holmes, Jason Campbell, Ahmad Carroll, William Joseph, Charles Grant, Freddie Mitchell, and Chris Hovan.

,

That's the rough spectrum you're probably looking at. There are a few guys there who are/were really able to play. A bunch of good players, and some absolute dogs. If you compare your guard at #25 to an imaginary group of guys playing "like an All-Star," the guard looks terrible. But there aren't a whole lot of all-stars in that group up above. Comparing a guard playing very good ball and protecting Allen and allowing the run game to be better and to take pressure off Allen compared to those guys the comparison is actually pretty reasonable.

 

The value a guy brings is how much better he helps the whole team, the whole system, to play. Guards can help a lot.

Of course guards can help a lot.  

 

The point is that at 25, the best you can hope for is that you're going to a guy who turns out to be really good at his position, like a Tre White.  The difference is that after four years, if you have a Tre White, you're happy to exercise the fifth-year option and pay what it takes to keep him long-term, because his position is so important.  Guard just isn't that important a position.  If you have good tackles and a good center, you can find people to play guard, which is exactly what the Bills have been doing.   Bates, Ford, Boettger, and Saffold isn't a bad plan going into OTAs.  

 

Now, granted, when there's a true stud guard in the draft, it's a different story, but that's a guy who's going in the top 10.  The Bills aren't drafting there.  

 

Some positions are more important than others.   Quarterback, left tackle, edge, corner.   At the other end of the spectrum, you have the long snappers and punters, which are the extreme cases, but among the starting 22, guards and tight ends are at the bottom.  The NFL contract requirements make it unwise to go after a guard in the bottom of the first round.   You can find a guy in the second round who's likely to be nearly as good and doesn't bring with him the contract problem that the guy in the first round does.  For an important position, like offensive tackle, the contract problem is worth it, for a guard, it isn't.  

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24 minutes ago, Shaw66 said:

Of course guards can help a lot.  

 

The point is that at 25, the best you can hope for is that you're going to a guy who turns out to be really good at his position, like a Tre White.  The difference is that after four years, if you have a Tre White, you're happy to exercise the fifth-year option and pay what it takes to keep him long-term, because his position is so important.  Guard just isn't that important a position.  If you have good tackles and a good center, you can find people to play guard, which is exactly what the Bills have been doing.   Bates, Ford, Boettger, and Saffold isn't a bad plan going into OTAs.  

 

Now, granted, when there's a true stud guard in the draft, it's a different story, but that's a guy who's going in the top 10.  The Bills aren't drafting there.  

 

Some positions are more important than others.   Quarterback, left tackle, edge, corner.   At the other end of the spectrum, you have the long snappers and punters, which are the extreme cases, but among the starting 22, guards and tight ends are at the bottom.  The NFL contract requirements make it unwise to go after a guard in the bottom of the first round.   You can find a guy in the second round who's likely to be nearly as good and doesn't bring with him the contract problem that the guy in the first round does.  For an important position, like offensive tackle, the contract problem is worth it, for a guard, it isn't.  

 

That's simply untrue.  In 20 drafts between 2000 and 2019,  5 guards were taken in the top 10 and 1 was drafted to be an OT.  2 were Pro Bowl and All Pro caliber.  In 20 drafts between 2000 and 2019, 11 guards were taken between #21-#32.  5 were Pro Bowlers and 2 were All Pros.    The bottom of the first round frequently does yield stud guards. 

 

Guards taken in the first round since 2000:

  • 2001 - 17 - Steve Hutchinson -  7 PBs, 5 All Pros
  • 2002 - 20 - Kendall Simmons
  • 2004 - 19 - Vernon Carey - started 107 games for Miami between 2004 and 2011
  • 2005 - 32 - Logan Mankins - 7 PBs, 1 All Pro
  • 2006 - 23 - Davin Joseph - 2 PBs
  • 2007 - 29 - Ben Grubbs - 2 PBs
  • 2008 - 15 - Branden Albert - converted to LT, made 2 PBs at LT
  • 2010 - 17 - Mike Iupati - 4 PBs, 1 All Pro
  • 2011 - 15 - Mike Pouncey - 4 PBs
  • 2011 - 23 - Danny Watkins
  • 2012 - 24 - Dave DeCastro - 6 PBs, 2 All Pros
  • 2012 - 27 - Kevin Zeitler - started 151 games between 2012 and 2021
  • 2013 -  7 - Jonathan Cooper
  • 2013 - 10 - Chance Warmack
  • 2013 - 20 - Kyle Long - 3 PBs
  • 2015 -  5  - Brandon Scherff - 5 PBs, 1 All Pro
  • 2015  - 9  - Ereck Flowers - converted to OT and then went back to G
  • 2015 - 28 - Laken Tomlinson - 1 PB
  • 2016 - 28 - Joshua Garnett
  • 2016 - 31 - Germain Ifedi
  • 2018 -  6 - Quenton Nelson - 4 PBs, 3 All Pros
  • 2018 - 23 - Isaiah Wynn, starter in NE
  • 2019 - 14 - Chris Lindstrom, starter in ATL

Furthermore, where a particular player was drafted becomes irrelevant after he's played in the NFL for a few years.   If your #25 guard or your #55 guard or your UDFA guard turns out to be a stud, he'll command stud guard money.  If you choose to pay him or not is your choice, but keeping DTs and LBs off your elite QB might be worth something.

 

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On 3/29/2022 at 9:44 AM, BearNorth said:

And the cost to move up a few picks is not usually that high where the Bills are drafting.  Each first round spot you move around pick 25 is basically a 5th round pick.  London is a California guy like JA17.  Also played guard for the Trojans, so suspect he has great quickness.

And the Bills talked to pretty much every first rd wr prospect…..but not London

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35 minutes ago, SoTier said:

 

That's simply untrue.  In 20 drafts between 2000 and 2019,  5 guards were taken in the top 10 and 1 was drafted to be an OT.  2 were Pro Bowl and All Pro caliber.  In 20 drafts between 2000 and 2019, 11 guards were taken between #21-#32.  5 were Pro Bowlers and 2 were All Pros.    The bottom of the first round frequently does yield stud guards. 

 

Guards taken in the first round since 2000:

  • 2001 - 17 - Steve Hutchinson -  7 PBs, 5 All Pros
  • 2002 - 20 - Kendall Simmons
  • 2004 - 19 - Vernon Carey - started 107 games for Miami between 2004 and 2011
  • 2005 - 32 - Logan Mankins - 7 PBs, 1 All Pro
  • 2006 - 23 - Davin Joseph - 2 PBs
  • 2007 - 29 - Ben Grubbs - 2 PBs
  • 2008 - 15 - Branden Albert - converted to LT, made 2 PBs at LT
  • 2010 - 17 - Mike Iupati - 4 PBs, 1 All Pro
  • 2011 - 15 - Mike Pouncey - 4 PBs
  • 2011 - 23 - Danny Watkins
  • 2012 - 24 - Dave DeCastro - 6 PBs, 2 All Pros
  • 2012 - 27 - Kevin Zeitler - started 151 games between 2012 and 2021
  • 2013 -  7 - Jonathan Cooper
  • 2013 - 10 - Chance Warmack
  • 2013 - 20 - Kyle Long - 3 PBs
  • 2015 -  5  - Brandon Scherff - 5 PBs, 1 All Pro
  • 2015  - 9  - Ereck Flowers - converted to OT and then went back to G
  • 2015 - 28 - Laken Tomlinson - 1 PB
  • 2016 - 28 - Joshua Garnett
  • 2016 - 31 - Germain Ifedi
  • 2018 -  6 - Quenton Nelson - 4 PBs, 3 All Pros
  • 2018 - 23 - Isaiah Wynn, starter in NE
  • 2019 - 14 - Chris Lindstrom, starter in ATL

Furthermore, where a particular player was drafted becomes irrelevant after he's played in the NFL for a few years.   If your #25 guard or your #55 guard or your UDFA guard turns out to be a stud, he'll command stud guard money.  If you choose to pay him or not is your choice, but keeping DTs and LBs off your elite QB might be worth something.

 

That's a great list, and I appreciate your taking the time to put it together.   But you'll have to do more research to disprove my point.  What your list proves is that there are good guards to be had in round one.  I never said there weren't, and I agree there are.   

 

What I said was that teams don't want to spend what they have to spend to keep good guards in their option years and as they hit free agency.   So, there's a greater tendency that you'll lose your first round pick in free agency.   When you draft a corner back who makes the Pro Bowl, you gladly pay the price of the option year, and you extend.  Same with an offensive tackle.   But with a guard, you end up paying the price of a top 5 guard to keep him, and that's more money than most teams want to allocate to a guard as they plan their cap spending.  

 

There are plenty of good guards, sure, and you can draft one if you want.  

 

Look at your list.  20 guards drafted in the first round in 20 years.  That's one a year.   22 starting position on the team, two of them are guards, that would suggest that 10% of the players taken in the first round would be guards.   It's not close to that.  Teams don't draft guards in the first round.   Three or four tackles will go in the first round, never three or four guards. 

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